Talking Brett Favre, Donovan McNabb and Big Al With Some Guy in MN

Written by Anthony Brown on .

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - DECEMBER 23: Bobby Wade #19 of the Minnesota Vikings carries the ball after making a catch against the Washington Redskins December 23, 2007 at the H.H.H. Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minnesota  (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
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This Sunday's match-up of Vikings vs. Redskins featuring two evenly matched teams. The Vikes are struggling more than the 'Skins at the moment, but Washington never met a Brett Favre team they could beat. We go to our Bloguin colleagues Purple Jesus Diaries and talk some Favre, McNabb, Haynesworth and yellow pants.

Redskins Hog Heaven: Thank you, Vikings, for taking the spotlight off Donovan McNabb, Mike Shanahan and Albert Haynesworth. Leslie Frazier says Brett Favre will remain as starting quarterback. How does firing Brad Childress help Brett and the offense?

Purple Jesus Diaries: You're welcome, but to be fair, it does appear that the attention is on the Titans now as well, so we should probably both send them a nice holiday wreath to show our thanks. Brett Favre will remain the starting quarterback, but I'm not sure if this helps or doesn't help. Favre is having one of the worst seasons of his career, and Childress is just the fall guy for him. I think with Childress gone you'll see a lot more of how offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell and Favre had always wanted to run this offense since last year, with more audibles at the line and probably more stupid Favre interceptions. Hopefully, Frazier steps in and says "Uh, we have Adrian Peterson. Stop throwing interceptions and just give him the ball on hand offs and check downs, dammit. I'm trying to get a head coaching job here."

RHH: If Favre is benched, what should concern us about Tavaris Jackson?

PJD: I would have zero concerns about TarVar. People like to think of him as a scrambling quarterback, as some guy with a big arm, but really, the only coach in the entire NFL who he had support from just walked out of the Viking facility doors. I think the TarVar era is going to end very quietly, largely because he now has no support, and because the team simply can't bench Favre. He's making too much money, he's still, somehow, too popular amongst the fan base, and I think it's one of those scenarios where you just go down with the burning ship, Favre at the helm for sure.

RHH: Mike Shanahan thinks that Childress' dismissal will fire up the Vikings? Do you see evidence of that with player comments?

PJD: I don't know if you see those in comments, necessarily, but it's not uncommon to think. I mean, the players feel bad that their crappy play got this guy canned, but it's not like there was a ton of support for Childress in the locker room anyway. No one is going out to "Win this one for Baldy!" or anything. I think you'll see more inspired play for Frazier more than anything, but probably only for about a full half before the Vikings revert to the norm for the 2010 season.

RHH: What concerns you about the Washington Redskins going into this game?

PJD: Everything? I don't know much about their defense, and I think both teams have a bit of Jekyll and Hyde syndrome. Who will show up? Will the offensive lines play well? Will Laron Landry trash talk one of OUR players early to guarantee a win? I think it will be an interesting game because there are so many unknowns.

RHH: How should the Redskins offense attack the Vikings offense?

PJD: You just got to pass on them. The defense is if nothing mediocre this year. Normally, you couldn't run on the team so you would HAVE to pass, but this year it's more that the Viking have Antoine Winfield in the backfield and that's pretty much it for safety and cornerback play. Greg Jennings just went off for 150 yards and three touchdowns. We all got to see Aaron Rodgers do his stupid hop-skip celebration several times last Sunday. I remember in more recent years past when McNabb was in Philly he came into the Metrodome both regular season and post-season and mopped the Vikings good. He's always done that. If he puts the ball in the air this weekend I don't see anything different about what will happen.

RHH: We have this neat defensive lineman available for trade. Would the Vikings give up a third and sixth round pick for Albert Haynesworth? If not, would you give up a fourth round pick and a ham sandwich?

PJD: 4th and a ham sandwich sounds swell as long as there is Swiss cheese on it too and if you pick a new franchise QB in the draft and give us McNabb as well. You don't really want him, right??

RHH: How will the Vikings-Redskins game play out and what is the final score?

PJD: The Vikings haven't won on the road in like a year and a half, so any Vikings fan picking them to win now would be an idiot. I think it'll be a pretty close game. The Vikings HAVE had some close games this year despite their embarrassing record, including opportunities for last minute winning drives against the Packers and the Jets on the road. I think the Redskins are playing all out of wack this season, too, so it's hard to tell what they'll bring on Sunday. Same with the Vikings, especially with a new coach and a weeks worth of questions and butt chewings. I anticipate a close one, but the Skins will win another low scorer in the end, something like 23-17.

Thank you, PJD, for your Vikings insights. We answered questions about the Redskins and this game for Purple Jesus Diaries. Find them at the link here. We'll be here when you get back.

Happy Thanksgiving To All Our Redskins Hog Heaven Readers

Written by Anthony Brown on .

circa 1850:  In a postcard entitled 'Thanksgiving Day', a young boy with a hatchet chases a turkey across a field.  (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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Thanksgiving dinners take eighteen hours to prepare. They are consumed in twelve minutes. Half-times take twelve minutes. This is not coincidence. ~Erma Bombeck


Where ever you go, whomever you are with, we at Redskins Hog Heaven wish you the best in the spirit of Thanksgiving. 


Redskins vs Titans Defensive Review: Limiting Looks

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

NASHVILLE, TN - NOVEMBER 21: London Fletcher  of the Washington Redskins tackles Chris Johnson  of the Tennessee Titans during the first half at LP Field on November 21, 2010 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images)
With the offense converting it's third down opportunities and staying on the field against the Titans, it only made sense that this would be the game that the defense made a breakthrough in terms of getting off the field on third down.  Of course, the Redskins' problem against the Eagles wasn't third down defense, it was the inability to string two successful plays together to get to third down.  That was not much of an issue for the Redskins defense in this game.

The Redskins never really did slow down Titans all-world RB Chris Johnson.  On more than one occasion, a loose Johnson threatened to break this game wide open.  Johnson had his opportunities because of his own patience and explosiveness, and because of the Titans OL and their ability to dominate Kedric Golston (and to a lesser extent, Ma'ake Kemoeatu) at the point of attack.

When things go wrong for the Redskins run defense, the thing to do when analyzing the film is to immediately find London Fletcher and see why he didn't personally make the play.  Usually when Fletcher doesn't make the tackle, it's because someone (Landry or Orakpo) beat him to the line for a first opportunity play.  It's more complicated when things go bad.  Fletcher is the reason that the Redskins' run defense is better than it's pass defense.

Against an opponent like this, it's important to keep in mind that you can play a run near perfectly, make the tackle on the first contact, and Chris Johnson might still get six or seven yards out of a play with no real hole.  What you have to avoid doing is letting him get to the open field.  When Vince Young was the quarterback, the Titans got big plays through the passing game, and not through the running game.  After Rusty Smith relieved him at quarterback, the Titans got a single big play with the pass, but plenty of long runs.

Back to Fletcher: the Titans were able to neutralize him to a degree in this game with misdirection, if they weren't able to physically get a body on him.  HB Blades actually picked up a lot of the slack for this, making a number of long-run saving plays.  Johnson had a lot of trouble getting the edge on Orakpo on this game in the early phases, so he was able to create some long runs using draw plays that baited Orakpo to come towards the quarterback on pass.  Once he was outside Orakpo, both Fletcher and Blades faced an uphill battle to bring down Johnson before he hit the secondary.  A couple of other times, the Titans OL drove the Redskins DL back into Fletcher, forcing him to miss a tackle on Johnson, who hit up into the secondary.  This was mostly a factor late in the game.

Pass Defense and Randy Moss

I thought the pass defense was a little too Moss-centric for a guy who hadn't done anything this year (and didn't do anything today).  The Redskins oftentimes inverted their Moss side coverage with DeAngelo Hall responsible for staying over the top of Moss to take him away, and then using Kareem Moore underneath.  The other coverage they used was a more conventional cover two where the lack of pressure to Moss' side in the offensive scheme allowed Hall to get nosy and start aggressively jumping passes to Moss.  With the amount of time the Titans spent trying to throw to Moss, this was a useful counter-strategy by Jim Haslett.  Had the Titans been less enslaved to the idea of using Moss at the expense of guys like Chris Johnson and Bo Scaife, it might have come back to bite the Redskins in the form of touchdowns.

Scaife wasn't going to get great opportunities because Fletcher is a coverage stud, and so the Titans really missed 3rd year blocking TE Craig Stevens who would have either had a better coverage match-up or taken Fletcher in coverage to open up Scaife.  The other factor here is that Fletcher's dominance against tight ends this year emphasizes just how much the Redskins non-Landry safeties suck in coverage.  Usually, most defenses ask their safeties to handle tight ends.  In this defense, that worry is already handled, they just need to provide help on already covered receivers.  They don't.  Reed Doughty apparently wasn't going to play in deference to Anderson Russell, of all people, but was forced into action and he and Moore combined to give up 131 yards in 4 targets, 51 of those yards with something named Rusty Smith at quarterback.  That's obscenely bad.  Enter Macho Harris.

The Titans had just three third down conversions in this game: a 3rd and 6 in the second quarter, a 3rd and 3 on that same drive, and a 3rd and 2 in the 3rd quarter.  Lest you believe that the Redskins struggled in short yardage defense, the Titans failed to convert a 3rd and 3, a 3rd and 1, a 3rd and 4, and a 3rd and 3 in this one.

Phillip Buchanon had as much problem with the footing as anyone on the outside in this game, and allowed conversions, but he was not a major problem in this game.  He may have had a couple more passes defended if we played this one at FedEx Field instead.  His tackling was very good considering he was coming in late and out of control after slipping down.  Overall, he won his match-up on the outside with Nate Washington, even if Washington converted a third down or two on him.  Washington's longest catch of the day actually came vs. DHall on a play where Moss was on the Titans sidelines.  Hall lost his footing on that play, and it was a team-wide problem.  A lot of Redskins got hurt because of the playing surface.

Pass Rushing

With all the passing the Titans did, even with an undrafted rookie at quarterback, this could have been a nice opportunity to get healthy in terms of getting the passer on the ground.  They didn't do that, but the pressure on the passer was a significant factor in the outcome of the game.  Lorenzo Alexnader stripped Vince Young as he ran on the first dropback of the game, and that kind of pressure continued in this game.

The Redskins are using Brian Orakpo primarily as a weakside slot defender against singleback offensive looks, and their blitz packages do not emphasize Orakpo coming.  At maturity, I believe this defense will be able to do this.  This is a good blitzing team who was able to get pressure on Rusty Smith with some creative overloads in passing situations and could stay in their zones and bring extra guys.  That really put an emphasis on coverage for Orakpo, and he did it very well in this game.  Orakpo doesn't always sense screens when he's on an 'X' fire assignment, and I think Haslett was scared to death of being beaten by a screen to Chris Johnson.  While this defense was beaten on a screen to the fullback to Ahmad Hall, Johnson only got one screen attempt.  They did it on a 3rd down when they figured they could throw it over Orakpo.  Of course, there's that Fletcher guy who wasn't amused at this display of "creativity", and put the screen to rest by himself.

It's a problem that Orakpo can't get a lot of good rushing attempts in this defense considering he's the only pass rushing terror on the field, but with Alexander getting injured only two defensive snaps into the game, Carter and Orakpo have to split the rushing attempts.

It wasn't all bad.  Ma'ake Kemoeatu is a very good pass rusher, as far as nose tackles go.  He's the one responsible for hurting Vince Young's hand and he dominated Center Eugene Amano in this matchup.  We usually ask either Kedric Golston or Adam Carriker to turn into a contain end on the pass rush (usually, but not always, Carriker).  Daniels is good at this when he plays, but Carriker and Golston, the starters, are not edge rushers.  Vonnie Holliday continues his role dominance.  Haynesworth is just a great defensive player who needs as many opportunities as he can get.

Brian Orakpo did lead the team with three pressures on quarterback in this game, and he remains the team's best pass rusher.  But this was the second toughest three game stretch of the Redskins' schedule this year (first: Eagles-Packers-Colts), and Orakpo didn't get a sack in that three game stretch.  Being the best on a bad unit may not be enough.  We need him to be great in whatever role we ask of him.  He is the guy this defense is built around.

The big problem here is that our variation of the 3-4 (Pittsburgh) is not designed to line up in the base front and just rush four guys, because three of the four guys on the field are run-first players.  That's the case with the Redskins.  With so many run first players on the field, quick pass pressure is about overloading and getting a free rusher who is a sack-strip threat.  That's Landry, Carter, Orakpo, Haynesworth, Alexander, Wilson, or Doughty.  In the base defense, there is room to play just three of those guys at one time, and if we continue to rush four all the time, there's no benefit to playing this style of the 3-4 defense.

I think we need to get back to the roots of the defensive scheme, and that's pressure first.  I realize that we're merely playing it conservative right now, but here come the embattled Minnesota Vikings, with their terrible offensive line, and 41 year old quarterback.  I hope the defense brings the heat from every angle and hits Favre on every single drive and chooses to not just win this next game at home, but to win emphatically.

Redskins vs Titans Offensive Review: Little to Complain About

Written by Greg Trippiedi on .

NASHVILLE, TN - NOVEMBER 21: Quarterback Donovan McNabb  of the Washington Redskins drops back to pass against the Tennessee Titans at LP Field on November 21, 2010 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Redskins won 19-16 in overtime. (Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images)
There's not a lot to be unhappy about regarding this offensive performance, but all I can promise is that I'll do my best to pretend I can still get angry.  Remember, it was just three weeks ago that this offense was being shut down in Chicago and Detroit.  That will get the blood boiling.  A little bit, at least.

Getting Clinton Portis back is was a big boost for this offense.  Portis doesn't bring explosive big plays, and hasn't for many seasons, but boosted the running game immediately with the first couple of carries.  He was hurt in the second quarter after runs of 11 and 10 yards and a screen reception of 15 in just 6 touches.  But 6 touches is all Portis got before getting re-injured (IR - out for season), and he didn't even get to pop anybody.  It's a big blow to the Redskins hopes to do something down the stretch, as are the injuries to the offensive line in this game. 

There are plenty of structural flaws in the way the offense was built.  Rushing effectiveness is a combination of scheme and guile.  The Redskins do really creative things to try to split the defense and create rushing lanes for their backs to run in.  I think they happened -- purely by chance -- to stumble upon a group of five guys up front who can create opportunities for the backs.  The first change came at the end of the third drive, when Casey Rabach went injured.  Will Montgomery, who was starting at RG, bumped over to center.  I was skeptical over to whether he would even be an improvement over the embattled Rabach because Montgomery was so horrible last season.  Not only did he exceed some relative expectations, he looked...good.  Will Montgomery was the quickest, most decisive player in the front seven on this day, and executed the difficult blocks on the interior line to the best of his ability while doing some major damage at the second level.  Montgomery can't really anchor at the point of attack (he was overwhelmed on the Sellers FB dive on the goal line), but the difference between him and Rabach is that Montgomery often got the first blow in on the Titans defensive tackle Tony Brown.  Rabach often misses the same kind of block by taking longer to set the point of the block, and then getting overwhelmed by players who are bigger/stronger/faster (i.e. everyone).  Montgomery seemed to have a different plan: the scheme allows him to stalemate his assignment, so Montgomery would often set the block early, lose his feet a bit, and then just when the linebacker thought he had him beat, he would reposition to seal off the path to the ball of the defender.  It was...effective, and its how the zone blocking scheme can make an effective player out of a weaker college-type lineman: technique over power. 

The other thing that mattered in the rushing attack was that the Titans used primarily a "wide-9" front with their defensive ends: an alignment that places the two defensive ends off, outside the offensive tackles, which creates extra space for the pass rusher to engage.  It's been an effective strategy against our offense this year, but not because Titans DC Chuck Cecil is some type of great innovator, but because the Detroit Lions caused the Redskins fits when they ran this front and Kyle Shanahan was simply unable to adjust away from his preferred bootlegs and stretch runs to give his team a chance against Kyle Vanden Bosch.  The prevailing theory going into that game was that "Trent Williams would handle it."  He was wrong then, and clearly came out anticipating a similar look from a Titans coaching staff that bred the Lions coaching staff.  In three weeks, we went from the unprepared party to the team that was dictating all the action.  Kyle Shanahan used these non-bootleg dominated playcalls to attack the Titans defense:

  1. Screens of all sorts
  2. Edge stretches that treated the frontside upfield end as a "backside" defender
  3. Bunch principles to help quickly define McNabb's reads
  4. Isolation principles to help quickly define McNabb's reads
The idea was to take the wide-9s and make the advantage the Titans are trying to gain a schematic weakness.  While it certainly helped that there was no Ndamukong Suh type (i.e. Albert Haynesworth) to go and kill the Redskins on the interior, if you're going to practice defeating the wide-9s all week, you just have to hope that the opposing coaching staff is too stupid to make the necessary adjustments to help their team win.  In this sense, the Redskins got lucky.  The Titans coaching staff really dropped the ball here.

But the response of the Redskins opened up all sorts of big play opportunities for the offense.  They didn't hit on all of them.  When evaluating the extent to which Donovan McNabb has declined as a quarterback, it's important to remember that even in his prime, he didn't make all of the plays available to him in any given game.  This was the man who once, in that Eagles offense, completed 23 throws in a row, so we're still waiting on some sort of similar hot streak.

I thought McNabb played really well, and the biggest difference was improved timing and precision.  Some of the throws he made in the middle of the field, to Galloway, to Armstrong, etc were among the best throws he has made this year.  I think he's starting to get erratic with the deep rainbow throws as his arm declines in that direction, but as far as routes thrown over the middle, it's hard to see a time in his career where he was throwing these balls harder.  And the Redskins receivers, for the most part, did their part in this one.  Even, sometimes, Galloway.

McNabb made a couple of bad mistakes in this game, and his biggest mistakes were thrown out of the natural timing of the play.  The interception and near-interception come to mind immediately.  As bad as that INT over the middle looked when he threw it, there are a couple of things about that play that could justify that throw.  That route Galloway was running is known as a backside window, which is to say: he's not part of the progression.  Even though that play was designed to go to the right, McNabb is likely to bring it back over the middle before pulling it down and running with it, or throwing it away.  The problem was: Galloway sat down in a particularly spacey spot in the zone coverage and was uncovered at the point where all the linebackers reached their drop depth.  It was a "Tampa 2" coverage.  When McNabb came back to the middle and saw him, McNabb saw a guy standing by himself, and more than just that, a guy who felt he was completely alone via a blown coverage.

Galloway was open.  He wasn't alone, and yes, there is a difference.  When MLB Will Witherspoon hit the depth of his drop and there was no throw to react to, he was able to react to Galloway being in a hole in the coverage and drove on the route.  McNabb didn't see Witherspoon because he didn't have any idea whether he was going back or coming up.  He just sees an open Galloway by himself over the middle.  For Galloway, it can sometimes be terribly costly if you just assume that no one on the defense knows where you are.  But by not coming back to the ball even one step, Galloway gives Witherspoon the opportunity, and the rule-book right, to go right through his back and play on the ball.  Good play by Witherspoon, but in the NFL, that might as well be realized as let a defender take it away from you.  Joey Galloway isn't aggressive enough to play over the middle at the NFL level.  And yes, McNabb blew this one too.  You only want to throw this ball if you have a good picture of what the coverage is, and McNabb did not.  He just trusted his receiver to be making a play for him, and that receiver was Galloway.  That combination of failures results in a fairly routine INT for the Titans.

McNabb's throw on the sideline to Armstrong that was temporarily ruled an interception wasn't a particularly risky decision, as that was a spectacular pass breakup and making an INT on that ball would have been one of the great defensive plays of the year.  But it was a poor amount of benefit against the cost to make that throw.  McNabb has five yards running that ball, and maybe seven or eight if he completes it?  But that was highly likely to be an incomplete pass.  He should have just tucked it in and picked up what he could.

To credit this now-maligned passing duo, the Redskins' third down conversion of a 3rd and 17 was the longest such conversion by the team this season.  Galloway ran a really effective route past the sticks and McNabb drilled it in there. 

Stephon Heyer

After Derrick Dockery (who was very ineffective in this game as a screen blocker and a run blocker) was hurt, Stephon Heyer had to come off the bench to play RG.  I thought he was a contributor to our best 5-man offensive line group of the year, if only because Jammal Brown and Heyer are among the five best offensive linemen on the team.  It's clear by the way he tried to execute his screens that Heyer had never actually taken reps at the position.  I've talked at length about how Heyer has improved his run blocking since the start of 2009, and this ended up being a really great effect.  If Kory Lichtenstieger and Will Montgomery are really our best LG-C combo (and hell, they probably are), the Redskins then can't just put Artis Hicks back at RG and hope for the best.  Heyer looks like an option as a potential long-term RG solution.

I didn't think he played great in this game.  He gets beaten less often in pass protection than Hicks, but that's not saying much.  The Titans had no idea that we would be playing a 6'8" guard, and couldn't scheme to beat him.  He didn't make any major mistakes (he played more than a half and didn't hold, where Dockery played a quarter, and did).  And in the running game he did his most damage, really driving defensive tackles off the ball backwards (also: Titans star DT Jason Jones was out-injured by the time that he entered in the second quarter).

Still, I think the Redskins may need to get creative to fix their RG hole created by Randy Thomas' decline and only temporarily fixed by giving $3 million/year to Hicks.  Creative may be something like trying to change Casey Rabach's position when he is healthy.  Or it may be to bring up Erik Cook from the practice squad and give him a look.  Or it could be the three tackle offensive line with Heyer on the inside.  I just don't think bringing Artis Hicks back when he is healthy is any sort of solution at all.

It's worth saying: both Trent Williams and Jammal Brown did well in this one.  Brown missed some blocks early in the game, but unlike against the Lions, McNabb was on his game early from a protection-timing standpoint, and many of his 20 incompletions were simply smart throws to save a sack.  McNabb played very well here, and so did his offensive line.

Running scheme

Really, I think that the Shanahan's have done an excellent job during the week designing ways to attack the defense on the ground.  They haven't done it every week (we used very base, simplistic looks against the Lions for example), but this isn't the "zone blocking scheme" attack you've heard you were getting.  For one thing, the stretch and go running game was already here under Zorn.  That's still the bread and butter of the offense, and they've been doing it for years.  There are no interior runs between the guards by this team.  None.  When a play goes between the guards, it's because that's where the play broke.  It happens a lot, just never by design.

We had trouble moving the upfield ends against the Detroit Lions, so against the Titans, the Redskins decided that they were going to stretch the edge anyway, but instead of trying to hook the defensive end on the playside, it just made more sense to treat it more like pass protection or a backside run, and let him go a couple of yards up the field, then run where he used to be.  The left tackle, many times, was responsible for sealing the end after letting the end run him into the backfield.  It worked well: 10 on 10 football is way less congested than 11 on 11.

The other thing is, while Ryan Torain wants to go outside everybody and wasn't going to have a good day against the Lions three weeks ago, Keiland Williams and Clinton Portis both do a better job attacking the line of scrimmage while also getting towards the sideline while the blocking is set up there.  The Redskins receivers continue to do an excellent job blocking on the edge.  Even Galloway.

The Nuts and Bolts of Passing

Schematically, we're best when the coaches stress the running game all week, and go out and try to run to both sides with many schemes and concepts, making the defense guess from the start.  This is because defenses are run-oriented, and won't be satisfied when they are getting gashed on the ground.  They will keep fidgeting until they can stop you.  And then balanced offense is easy to achieve.

All of that is very true, and why a running game is still important in modern football...but wins and losses come though the air.  You want to win, be good at throwing the ball and stopping the pass above all.  The Redskins throw it better than they run it, still.  And between some smoke passes that we've been slow to use, as well as some screens that got the ball in the hands of Fred Davis and let him make plays so McNabb didn't half to, the Redskins have started to resemble some of the passing machines that Donovan operated with the Eagles.

The passing game also needs to be able to put you in the end zone.  It did that last Monday against the Eagles, not so much in this one.  McNabb's statline: 30/50, 376, 1, 1, is as good as it's been since the Texans game in Week 2.  You could argue that this was his best game as a Redskin, and he threw just one TD.

McNabb was most efficient during the "Chris Cooley offensive period" of the 4th quarter and overtime.  Cooley was the intended target on four of five passes to end regulation, as well as the first pass in overtime.  The Titans were weak in the middle of the field because of their coverage preferences for two-deep and the inability of their league-leading pass rushers to ever get near McNabb.  Using Cooley to attack that weakness wasn't part of the gameplan going in, but was a nice adjustment that did a couple of things: defined reads, and defined timing.  It's been like this going back 7 years, but when Cooley gets hot, you can't do much to stop the Redskins passing offense.  In the 4th quarter, Cooley was hot.  They just need to find a way to make him a factor in the red zone, where he has just five total touchdowns since the start of the 2008 season.

This was a good team the Redskins just beat.  They may be just 5-5 now and struggling with their quarterback situation and entire passing game, but the Redskins were dealt ever possible blow going in and still had a really, really good team unable to get on the field to throw a pass.  It was their best offensive performance of the year, to date, and the offense should get a majority of the credit for this victory.

Season Is Over for Clinton Portis

Written by Anthony Brown on .

PHILADELPHIA - OCTOBER 03: Clinton Portis  of the Washington Redskins runs the ball against the Philadelphia Eagles on October 3, 2010 at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)
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The Washington Redskins placed star RB Clinton Portis on Injured Reserve, according to a story appearing on usatoday.com.

Portis missed five games this season after suffering a groin tear. He returned to action against the Tennessee Titans and reaggravated the injury. A MRI scan taken after the game proved negative and Portis as recently as yesterday expressed the hope to play against the Minnesota Vikings Sunday. His injured reserve status ends his season.

Portis rushed for 6,824 yards and 46 touchdowns over seven seasons with Washington. He had 176 receptions for 1,340 yards and three touchdowns. Portis completed three of six passes, all for touchdowns, and holds a 116.0 QB rating.

Counting his years with the Denver Broncos under Mike Shanahan, Portis has a career total 9,923 yards and 75 touchdowns. 

That touchdown total with Denver is something of a sore point. Portis scored a touchdown for every 19 attempts as an edge rusher in the 2002-2003 seasons in Shanahan's West Coast Offense.  

Joe Gibbs used him as a power back in his muscular version of the Downfield Offense. Portis bulked up for the role. The added weight slowed him down, but suited the offense better. Opposing defenses were little concerned by the Redskins' passing game, so they loaded eight players in the box to stop Portis.

He found success anyway and powered Washington's playoff runs in the 2005 and the 2007 seasons. However, his scoring productivity dropped to one score for every 36 attempts.

Impatient fans attributed the drop to Portis rather than to the scheme. They looked with disdain at the trade that brought him here.

Portis agitated for a new contract after his astounding performance in Denver. In Washington, Champ Bailey did not like what he was seeing in new owner Daniel Snyder's regime and made clear to the Redskins that he would not re-sign with the team. Gibbs, in his new role as team president, offered Bailey and two draft picks to Shanahan for Portis

Observers (like me) felt Denver would have accepted an even swap of players without sweetening the deal with trade picks. Bailey at the time was considered the league's premier shutdown cornerback who was as much the face of the team as LaVar Arrington.

Portis is receiving the final guaranteed portion of his salary in 2010. His contract status opens the door for Portis and Washington to part ways after the season, though neither side has spoken of that possibility. Portis, Chris Cooley, LaRon Landry and Phillip Daniels are the most prominent faces of the Gibbs II era in Washington. Portis has such an out-sized personality that his departure would signal the end of Gibbs' influence on the team.

The National Football Post reports that the Redskins signed RB Andre Brown to the roster off of the Denver Broncos practice squad.  

UPDATE: Joseph White of the Associated Press reports that Portis suffered a new injury in the Tennessee game and not the aggravated groin tear as first believed. The injury requires surgery and at least two months of rehabilitation to repair. 

Norv Turner, Jason Campbell Named Ex-Redskins Of Week 11

Written by Anthony Brown on .

San Diego Chargers head coach Norv Turner yells at an official in the second quarter of their AFC Divisional NFL playoff football game against the Indianapolis Colts in Indianapolis, Indiana, January 13, 2008. Turner has a reputation for being almost boringly low-key in public but a woeful start to this season prompted him to deliver a fiery message to his team behind closed doors. That stern address by the usually taciturn Turner midway through San Diego's 33-25 victory over the Tennessee Titans in Game Eight could well prove to be a decisive turning point in their 2010 campaign. Picture taken January 13, 2008. To match Feature NFL-CHARGERS/ REUTERS/Jeff Haynes/Files (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT FOOTBALL)
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Ex-Redskin of the Week: Norv Turner, Head Coach San Diego Chargers
Patrick Ramsey competed with Norv Turner to be named Redskins Hog Heaven's Ex-Redskin of the Week. Ramsey won consideration just for hanging around the NFL so long after his 2006 Redskins departure to be signed as back-up quarterback for the Miami Dolphins. Ramsey is a depth signing. When we say depth, we mean deep depth for a team that started and benched Chad Henne, tried out Tyler Thigpen only to see that fail, and lost Chad Pennington to IR. Ramsey was signed to replace Pennington, but the Dolphins would likely go back to Thigpen before starting Ramsey.

Instead, we are going with Norv Turner for Ex-Redskins honors after San Diego's 35-14 win over division rival Denver Broncos on Monday Night Football. And we are making up for a guilty conscience. See, we named Turner Ex-Redskin of the Weak back on October 27 after a Chargers loss to the Patriots left the team with a 2-5 record and shaky for the playoffs. We said then how dangerous it was to name Turner for Weak honors in October. Turner is such a November-December guy.

Typical Norv; It's November, so his Chargers won the next three games. At 5-5, San Diego trails Kansas City by one game for the AFC West lead. With recalcitrant hold-out Marcus McNeil back at left tackle and Antonio Gates on the mend, who has the guts to count the Chargers out of the post-season? Not I, said the duck.

Redskins Hog Heaven changed its policy of naming just anyone for Ex-Redskins of the Weak as we did for Turner. Now, you have to actually have a weak performance to earn it. Otherwise, the honor shall go unfilled. That's better anyway. No Redskins alumnus should have a weak performance.

Ex-Redskin of the Weak, Jason Campbell, Quarterback, Oakland Raiders
Jason, Jason, Jason. Nobody does a better job proving both sides of the arguments about themselves than Jason Campbell. His fans say Campbell worked hard under great uncertainty to emerge as a solid journeyman NFL quarterback. If the Baltimore Ravens could win a Super Bowl with Trent Dilfer, any team can make the playoffs with Campbell. His detractors say there is no way Campbell could lead a team to the post-season, you know, dumps too many balls, too many turnovers, no command of the huddle, blah, blah, blah. Not good enough to carry a team; Not bad enough to permanently bench. Campbell exists in a virtual no-mans land.

Campbell was benched twice this season, the latest time against the powerful Pittsburgh Steelers last Sunday. That's why he made this honor now. Yet, Raiders coach Tom Cable named him starting quarterback for Oakland's next game against Miami. Redskins fans have wondered if Washington made a mistake dumping Campbell after watching Donovan McNabb's early performance. The jury is still out on that, but the Redskins players believe in McNabb more than they believed in Campbell. Oh, they liked Jason and they backed him, but they believe in McNabb.

I'm convinced the belief in McNabb played a role in the debacle against the Eagles. The team was shocked when McNabb was benched and was still in shock two weeks afterwards when the Eagles were in town.

Campbell still has youth on his side. His skills approximate those of 34 year old McNabb's. Redskins Hog Heaven does not condone unsportsmanlike conduct, but we suggest Campbell take teammate Richard Seymour's hint and just go slap somebody. He'll write checks to the league, but he'll also show a pulse that might ignite more confidence in him by his coach. Seymour's sucker punch of Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger did nothing to alter the outcome of the game. But Seymour already had a fierce reputation. He doesn't have to prove anything. Gentleman Jason has to do something less gentlemanly to stay on the field. Only, don't do what that guy Vince Young did and figuratively smack down the coach. 

Should The Redskins Have Kept Ladell Betts?

Written by Anthony Brown on .

LANDOVER, MD - NOVEMBER 15: Keiland Williams  of the Washington Redskins makes a break against the Philadelphia Eagles on November 15, 2010 at FedExField in Landover, Maryland. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
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The Washington Redskins are swapping running backs left and right to cope with a rash of injuries. The 'Skins promoted James Davis from the practice squad to replace back-up running back Chad Simpson who broke his foot during pregame warm-ups of the Tennessee Titans game. (How does a thing like that happen?)

Simpson was on the roster as a back-stop to Ryan Torain who was filling in for starting tailback Clinton Portis who missed five games due to a groin tear. Torain is "97 percent certain" to miss the Minnesota Vikings game due to a hamstring injury, according to head coach Mike Shanahan. Washington is down to three healthy backs, Keiland Williams, Darrel Young and Davis.

If you are like me, and I know I am, you might be wondering what if Ladell Betts were here?

Betts was pushed out by the Shanahan regime. He is remembered in Washington for standing in for Portis in 2006. Portis, you recall, dislocated his shoulder in a preseason game and missed half the season. Betts had a career year with 1,599 yards of total offense, five touchdowns, and 81 first downs. Can't we use that performance now?

As good as it was, there are two problems with Betts' numbers. First, Betts scored but five touchdowns on 298 touches (rush attempts plus pass receptions), or one score for every 60 touches. Clinton Portis, playing with an injured shoulder, scored seven touchdowns on 144 touches. Portis was three times more productive per touch than Betts, or anyone else on the team. Where Betts was a rusher, Portis was a scorer.

Second, Betts was 27 years old in 2006. 

We hardly miss him. Keiland Williams (24) has 357 yards total offense on 73 touches with five touchdowns, roughly one score for every 15 touches. Betts, now 31 and with New Orleans, scored twice on 68 touches, a 1:34 ratio. Williams (5-11, 223 lbs) is near-identical in size and weight to Betts (5-11, 224 lbs) and Portis (5-11, 219 lbs).

If you are like me, and I know I am, you like the score to touch ratio provided by Williams and Ryan Torain (99 touches, four scores) and you like their youth.

Shanahan frustrates fantasy owners with his running back by committee schemes. But it works for real teams and especially for Shanahan. Philadelphia's emergence as the most dynamic young offense in the Beast adds urgency Washington's need to get younger.  

While we appreciate what 'Skins alum Betts did back then, there's no looking back now.